Colour doesn't come into it, johnie. 
The emphasis was on trash!! 
 
Kim
I DO THINK YOU PUT THE WORD 'WHITE' NEXT TO TRASH BY SIMPLE COINCEDENCE YOU ARE HATER AND THEN YOU ACCUSE ME FOR RACISM AND HATE
KIM ARE YOU ENGLISH?
ENJOY THE RUSSIAN CIVILIZATION AS IT IS DEMONSTRATED BY MR RUSSIAN
I NEVER INSLUTED SOMEBODY'S MOTHER OR ANY MEMBERS OF HIS FAMILY UNLIKE SOME SAVAGES
SORRY INSULTED I WANTED TO SAY
DON'T TALK FOR ALL RUSSIANS. I JUST REPRESENT MY OWN POINT OF VIEW ABOUT YOUR ATTITUDES.  
 
TELL ME DUDE, DO YOU WANT LIVE PEACEFULLY. THEN SHUT THE FUCCK UP. IN MY OPINION, YELTSIN IS VERY SOFT. OTHERWISE, YOU FAT AMERICANS, WOULDN'T TALK ABOUT OUR COUNTRY THIS WAY.  
 
I PROMISE TO YOU THAT YOU GOT ONE MORE ENEMY. FROM NOW ON, WE WILL BUILD ONLY WEAPONS AND NUKES. IT CAN'T BE OTHERWISE. YOU AMERICANS ARE •••••• UP. YOU ARE AFRAID OF US LIKE RATS. ONE MORE YEAR AND YOU'LL SEE WHAT I MEAN. YOU WILL DIE, YOU WHORE. YOUR MOM WILL DIE, ALL YOUR KINS WILL DIE. FUCCCK YOU, YOU FULL AF SHEET.
No, Johnie, 
I'm a Euro-hybrid. 
Taught to spell the English not the American way. 
Took you a while to spot that,heh. 
Did you look it up in the dictionary? 
 
K.A.
I SWEAR THAT I POST ONLY UNDER MY NICK. 
RUSSIA IS WRONG IN CAUCASUS 
FREEDOM TO CHECHNYA
YOU STILL DID NOT ANSWER MY QUESTIONS KIMMIE  
 
Um, what was the question, johnie? 
It all seemed a bit rhetorical to me.
NEW INFORMATION : 
RUSSIA USES CHEMICAL WEAPONS VERSUS THE CHECHEN FIGHTERS: 
Russia is using chemical weapons in Chechnya 
 
  Grozny, Chechnya 
  Source: Kavkaz-Tsentr 
  Date: December, 6, 1999 
 
  Today, at 8 am Oktyabrskiy and Staropromislovskiy districts of Grozny, the capital 
  of the Chechen Republic, were shelled with special chemical bombs, which release 
  clouds of inflammable gas creating massive blasts that incinerate buildings and 
  people. 
 
  37 people have died, more than 200 people were injured and wounded as the 
  result of this unhuman attack, forbidden by all possible International treaties. 
 
  The first victims were 47 years old Marat Irischanov and his 15 years old daughter 
  Zina. The number of victims is rising every minute. 
 
  There was unusual yellow light, that could be seen throughout the city after the 
  chemical attack by russians. 
 
  --- 
 
  This is a war Putin and Yeltsin dare not lose. Huge resources have been deployed 
  - crack troops paid premium wages, high-tech equipment, total air and artillery 
  superiority to achieve a "bloodless" victory - bloodless for the Russian army. It is 
  the civilian population that is taking the heaviest casualties. 
 
  However the budget of Russian Federation is unable to sustain a long and 
  expensive high tech war in Chechnya. For Yeltsin and Putin the war is a desperate 
  gamble - a throw on which they are staking all. Key parliamentary and presidential 
  elections are looming. Putin, Boris Yeltsin's designated heir, hopes to guarantee 
  the succession by a total victory over the Chechens. 
 
  Russians are using barbaric weapons against civilians. Chechen cities (there are 
  only three of them) and villages are being completely destroyed. Chechen nation 
  faces the danger of being wiped out. In short, all relevant norms of 
  international law are being violated by Russia. More precisely, there is 
  genocide of Chechen nation. 
 
  Unwillingly, one will come to the conclusion that the law of jungle governs 
  Russian-Chechen relations and the West's attitude to them. Most ironic thing in 
  this is that just recently the West, including the UN talked so much about the 
  rights and freedoms of ethical minorities and upheld these rights in Kosovo and 
  Estern Timor. Almost all of us were made to believe that at least international 
  humanitarian law was superior to both the principle of sovereignty and the 
  principle of non-intervention in ‘domestic’ affairs of a sovereign state. 
 
  What is then so special about Chechens? Is a life of a Chechen child is somehow 
  less worthy than a life of a child of other nation? Or do Chechens love their 
  families, their women, their land, their beliefs less than other nations do? 
 
  It's time to stop russian invasion into a foreign state and stop russian atrocities! 
  It's time for the World Community to wake up! It's time to say to russians: "Ivan - 
  Domoi!", which can be translated as "Ivan - Go Home!". 
 
  If you are US resident, please write a letter to your Representative! You can also 
  e-mail members of the Congress. For the visitors from other respected countries, 
  please contact your local officials and urge them to use all political and 
  economical pressure on Russia.
WHAT RUSSIA SEES IN CHECHNYA: 
What does Russia see in Chechnya? Oil 
  By Andrew Meier 
  Date: Jan, 20, 1995 
 
  Of the many issues baffling Western observers about Russia's intervention in 
  Chechnya, the question of timing -- why now? -- has gone unanswered. The 
  reason is simple: oil. 
 
  Chechnya, as many correspondents have noted, has considerable oil reserves of its 
  own that Moscow clearly wants to hold onto. But this would not explain the timing. 
  Indeed, oil production in Chechnya has been dropping drastically -- by some 71 
  percent since 1991. 
 
  Much more significant is the fact that control of Chechnya enables Russia to 
  control the flow of natural resources, mainly oil and gas, from its former Soviet 
  republics. The small mountain region sits astride a critical pipeline that links the 
  oil-rich republics of Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan (on the landlocked Caspian Sea) 
  with the Russian port of Novorossiysk on the Black Sea. 
 
  Over recent months, a series of seemingly unrelated developments threatened to 
  eliminate that strategic leverage, upping the ante on Yeltsin as he sought to 
  contain the Chechnya movement for independence. 
 
  Last September, in a deal that went virtually unnoticed except by a few oil 
  executives in the West, Azerbaijan signed what it called "the deal of the century" 
  -- an $8 billion oil deal with a broad consortium of Western oil companies. The 
  contract, worked out over months of hard bargaining, called for building a new 
  pipeline that would skirt Russia to channel Azeri oil through Turkey or Iran to 
  Western buyers. 
 
  Although Moscow managed to strongarm its way into a 10 percent cut of the deal, 
  it stands to gain far greater control of both the licensing fees and the spigot if 
  Kazakh oil flows along the existing pipeline from the landlocked Caspian Sea through 
  a Russian-controlled Chechnya to the West. 
 
  Another important deal is soon to be signed among Kazakhstan, Russia and a 
  Western consortium led by British Gas to develop the giant Karachaganak natural 
  gas field in Kazakhstan. Originally, this plan -- which comes on the heels of even 
  larger deals Kazakhstan signed with Chevron and other U.S. firms to develop its 
  vast oil fields -- did not include direct Russian participation. But Moscow has made 
  it evident it wants equity participation in all energy export deals planned by its 
  former republics. Upcoming negotiations will focus on the terms for Gazprom's -- 
  Russia's state-owned natural gas company -- participation, and arrangements for 
  transporting the Kazakh gas and liquid condensate across Russian territory. 
 
  All told, these foreign deals with Central Asian states that border Chechnya total 
  nearly $28 billion, far too much money for a cash-strapped Russia to ignore for the 
  sake of risking another blotch on its inglorious record on human rights. 
 
  Yeltsin has cited numerous other factors to explain the military imbroglio in 
  Chechnya, ranging from the domino effect it could have on other republics, to 
  Chechen criminality to the dreaded spread of Islam through the Caucasus and 
  Central Asia. But more clues have surfaced recently pointing to the oil imperative. 
  Yeltsin recently named a former Soviet oil minister, Salambek Hajjiev, as head of 
  the so-called Chechen "Government of National Rebirth" and has vowed to install 
  him once the rebel leader Dzhokhar Dudayev is subdued. 
 
  In a letter dated Dec. 21, 1994, written by Yeltsin's increasingly influential 
  bodyguard, Gen. Alexander Korzhakov, to Prime Minister Victor Chernomyrdin, 
  Korzhakov warned against giving Westerners too much control of Russia's raw 
  materials. He further instructed the prime minister to review his recent agreements 
  with the World Bank aimed at liberalizing oil exports on the grounds that they would 
  prove "profitable to the World Bank, but not for Russia." 
 
  Until now, the general's letter -- mysteriously leaked to the press -- was treated as 
  a bizarre act in Russia's palace politics. But with Yeltsin's bodyguard assuming a 
  kind of Rasputin role, his missive looks more and more like the smoking gun behind 
  the Chechen invasion. At the least, it reveals the premium Yeltsin places on 
  retaining control of oil flowing from all the former Soviet republics.
Russians act in Chechnya as a fashists. No excuse. Shame forever.
98% of you so called people have avoided the "?" here, your wasting my time and others who would like to talk about the Chechnya problem. GET A LIFE. 
FOR YOUR INFO THE "?" WAS "IF CHECHNYA WAS ABLE TO ESTABLISH THEIR INDEPENDENCE COULD THEY SURVIVE IN THE CURRENT ENCONOMIC WORLD"?? 
 
THERE ARE CHAT LINES TO BULLSHIT ON!!!!
ABOUT THE RUSSIAN CRIMES IN CAUCASUS KIMIE 
THE OPPRESION OF CAUCASIANS  
THE RUSSIAN ATTROCITIES 
THEIR RIGHT TO FREEDOM
